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Oregon Caves National MonumentAn Educational group explored the blinds leads at Oregon Caves.
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Oregon Caves National Monument
General Cave Tours
Inside Oregon Caves
Inside Oregon Caves

Quick Cave Tour Information

Access information including cave schedule, fees, and cave tour precautions.

Be Aware That:

Tours are considered moderately strenous and children must be over 42 inches (107 cm) in height. 

Visitors can only enter the cave on a scheduled tour. No self guided tours are available. See Operating Hours & Seasons for more information on tour schedules.

Tours last 90 minutes. Expect at least 15 minutes for the walk back to your car. Wait times can reach up to two hours during the summer season.

 
There will be many places that bending while walking is required.
There will be many places that bending while walking is required.
Cave Tour Precautions
 
The cave tour lasts 90 minutes, is considered moderately strenuous, and is not recommended for people with heart, breathing, or walking problems. The half mile (1 km) route includes more than 500 stairs (most of which are steep and uneven) and a total climb of 230 feet (70 m). The lowest passageway you will have to duck under is about 45 inches (about 1 m) tall. Visitors have the option to leave the cave 45 minutes into the tour.
 
The first room of the cave is accessible to visitors using wheelchairs. Canes or walking devices must have stem diameters greater than one inch. For more information, please visit Accessibility.
 
A child too small to go on the cave tour.
A child too small to go on the cave tour.

Traveling with Children?

Children must be at least 42 inches (107 cm) tall and be able to demonstrate their ability to climb a set of test stairs, unassisted, to go on the full tour of the cave. Children may not be carried through the cave and childcare services are not available. There are also a variety of activities that children of all ages can participate in, including Junior Ranger program, multiple hiking trails and outdoor Ranger-Led programs for all family members to participate.

 
For your enjoyment of the tour, bring good walking shoes, a sweatshirt, and a camera.
For your enjoyment of the tour, bring good walking shoes, a sweatshirt, and a camera.
What to Bring for the Tour
  • Warm clothing. The cave is 44 degrees Fahrenheit (7 degrees Celsius) year round, the temperature of your refrigerator!
  • Good walking shoes. Please do not wear open-toed shoes, flip-flops or sandals without a supportive strap because the trail surface is uneven, slippery, and wet.
  • Optional: camera. Cameras must be on a strap or be able to slip easily into a pocket. Avoid cameras that are carried loose because they can easily be dropped in the cave. Taking pictures with flash is allowed in most areas of the cave but your ranger will ask you not to take photographs in areas where bats are known to roost. Taking pictures of sleeping bats can disturb them and possibly cause serious harm to them.
 
These items are not permitted in the cave.
These items are not permitted in the cave.

What NOT to Bring for the Tour

  • Flashlights. The cave is lit and rangers carry flashlights.
  • Backpacks, large purses and tripods. These are not permitted in the cave due to low ceilings and narrow passageways. Leave them in your car or check them in at the visitor center.
  • Your pet. If you can, leave your pets at home. If you are traveling with your pet, bear in mind that the shade will move while you are inside the cave, and shade is limited.
This snail was named after an employee of Oregon Cave, not because he was slow but because he wrote the technical description of the snail.  

Did You Know?
There is a snail that lives on the marble rock outcrops of Oregon Caves that has adapted to use the calcium from the rock to make its shell.

Last Updated: December 06, 2008 at 14:33 EST